four Marines Killed in Attacks on two Chattanooga Military Centers
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Five people — including four Marines and the foot gunman — are dead following shootings at two separate military centers in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
A police officer was also wounded and suffered non-life menacing injuries.
The suspected shooter has been ID’d as Muhammad Youssef Abdulazeez.
See further details, photos and more information on Adbulazeez, here.
Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke confirmed the five deaths at a news conference Thursday. The U.S. attorney in Tennessee said this will be investigated as an act of domestic terrorism.
Fox News chief intelligence correspondent Catherine Herridge said that it is "very unusual" for the FBI to already be taking the lead in the investigation and have several hundred agents heading to the scene.
Herridge said officials confirmed the attacker was not a military member and did not have known ties to the victims.
The shooting began at around eleven a.m. at U.S. Naval Recruiting on Lee Highway, where the suspect is believed to have fired in rapid succession for a period of minutes, then sped away in a silver Mustang.
A police officer was wounded at that location, but his injuries are not life menacing.
Smith said the suspect then drove about seven miles to the U.S. Naval Reserve Center on Amnicola Highway. That’s where the four Marines were shot before the suspect was killed by authorities.
A Chattanooga Times Free Press reporter heard two shots fired in the nearby forest, where it’s believed that the shooter was taken down.
The officer involved in the shooting is in stable condition.
Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke called the shooting "a very terrible situation."
A woman who says she witnessed the Chattanooga shooting told the Associated Press that she heard a barrage of gunfire.
"It was rapid fire, like pow pow pow pow, so quickly. The next thing I knew there were police cars coming from every direction," said Marilyn Hutcheson, who works at a Binswanger Glass.
Hutcheson says she ran inwards, where she remains with other employees and a customer. The gunfire continued with occasional bursts she estimated for twenty minutes.
"We’re apprehensive," Hutcheson said. "Not knowing what transpired, if it was a grievance or terroristic related, we just don’t know."
Hutcheson was on "Happening Now" this afternoon. See the interview below.